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Sharp Park Golf Course Must Close!

Thu, 03 Apr 2008, 10:54am, Tinman said
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A Recreation Alternatives at S.F. Golf Courses Taskforce has been created by the BOS to advise the City about the future management of its many golf courses. This body consists of golfers from each of the City’s courses plus a couple of token non-golfers, so it’s easy to see what direction it is likely to take. Still, due to considerable pressure from a variety of directions, one matter it is considering is closing the Sharp Park golf course.

This is a dramatically good idea, and here is why.

Sharp Park is located in San Mateo county but owned by San Francisco county and run by the SFRPD. The majority of its 411 acres constitute an officially-designated Significant Natural Resource Area due to the high biodiversity of its remnant coastal scrub communities. The lower 174 acres contain a golf course built back in the 1920s after the owners of the land deeded it to San Francisco for “recreational purposes”.

This golf course was only possible once a seawall was constructed to convert the salt-water marsh that covered the area west of Highway 1 into “usable” land. This area is the final drainage of the Sanchez Creek canyon, and the reason it was a salt-water marsh and not fresh is that the whole area is at or below sea-level, as shown in a current topographic map:

In photo below looking north along the seawall, note that it serves as a bi-directional dam — to keep the Pacific ocean out on the left, and to bottle up the drainage of the Sanchez Creek on the right. What results is now a fresh-water marsh that includes two larger bodies of water — Horse Stable Pond (seen on the right) and the larger Laguna Salada a bit further north and out of this photo. The final route for the creek drainage is through a pump and pipes. Yes, the City of San Francisco pumps the entire volume of water of this creek up and over this seawall into the ocean.

This habitat is great for critters, and indeed Sharp Park is home to documented breeding populations of the threatened California Red-legged frog and the endangered San Francisco garter snake.

However, there is trouble in paradise. The seawall is deteriorating due to damage from storm surf and burrowing squirrels, and salt-water incursion into Horse Stable pond has been documented. It is only a matter of time before rising ocean levels and further deterioration breach the seawall.

Furthermore, the Sanchez Creek drainage system is broken. The channel connecting Laguna Salada down to Horse Stable Pond (where the pump lives) is blocked. This means that the entire lower area is flooded for at least several months every winter during the rains—turning the front nine holes of the golf course into an unplayable “Sharp Park Lake”.

Partly due to these problems, partly due to the strong prevailing winds, and partly due to a variety of clumsy ways the golf course has been run by contracted vendors, it has become the least popular course that San Francisco owns. The “number of holes played” has dropped 38% since 2000, according the 2006 budget analyst audit. Golfers have many far better alternatives to Sharp Park, and they are voting with their feet.

So, why is there still a golf course there? Well, one group of supporters are the residents of Pacifica for whom this is their local neighborhood course—one that they enjoy courtesy of San Francisco taxpayers. What’s not to love about a major recreational outlet paid for by someone else? Another group appears to be the upper management ranks of the SF RPD, who seem simply to love golf. Of course, the RPD General Manager personally lives in Pacifica, so he’s got double reasons for backing the course. One wonders what his handicap is.

But unless those who want to maintain the golf course manage to stop rising sea levels by reversing global climate change and to suspend the law of gravity that sends water draining to the coast, the marsh — salt or fresh — will eventually win out and suspend play. The question is how much more good money San Francisco taxpayers are willing to throw after the bad in the meantime.

The only sensible thing from ecological and fiscal perspectives is to close the damn course. It was a ludicrous place to put it back then, and it is an unconscionable place to allow it to remain now. Let it drown.

Addendum—4 April 2008

It turns out that the current seawall was built in 1982. Prior to that, there were large natural dunes that protected the golf course. In fact, several holes were built on the ocean-side of these dunes. Not surprisingly, storms and high tides eventually ruined these holes, and a particularly large storm surge in 1982 wiped out several of the holes on the shore side of the dunes.

It was at this point that the current seawall was built. It, however, has also been breached to the point of requiring substantial repairs over the years. One such breach in the early 1990s killed many of the cypress trees, which still stand as mute testimony to the fact that grass greens walked upon by humans in orange-checked pants are merely a transitory phenomenon here. The ocean will eventually reclaim its own.


Comments

Fri, 04 Apr 2008, 8:43pm, Brent said:

Sharp Park would make a great San Mateo Co. Gateway for the GGNRA.


Mon, 07 Apr 2008, 8:24am, Butch Larroche said:

In case you did not know, Mori’s Point, just to the south of the golf course is already GGNRA land. As for my take on the article:

“So, why is there still a golf course there? Well, one group of supporters are the residents of Pacifica for whom this is their local neighborhood course—one that they enjoy courtesy of San Francisco taxpayers. What’s not to love about a major recreational outlet paid for by someone else?”

Are you assuming that only Pacifica residents play golf at Sharp Park? That would be wrong. SF residents, Pacifica rresidents and many other from the Bay Area play here wweekly.


Mon, 07 Apr 2008, 9:21am, Tinman said:

Well, fewer and fewer golfers — regardless of where they’re from — are playing at the course. The fact that some still do in no way alters the fundamental problems described above. The site would never be made into a golf course today, and it makes no sense to continue to try to keep it on life support now.


Tue, 08 Apr 2008, 9:11am, Butch Larroche said:

How do you know that the site would never be made into a golf course today? You could say that about alot of things but it does not change the facts. Sharp Park is a golf course today and should remain so. The arguement you offer, on whether something would never be built today can ebe used about the G G Bridge, Bay Bridge, just about anything. History cannot be changed to suit our thoughts or ideas. Sharp Park Golf Course offers a great recreational activity at a fair cost to the public. Also, Pacifica already has ample open space and that cannot be denied.


Tue, 08 Apr 2008, 9:38am, Tinman said:

A golf course could never be built at the current location today because it is endangered species habitat and because coastal protections are otherwise far more appropriately rigorous than they were back in the “anything goes” 1920s.

Further, one would hope that any golf course designer today would notice that the entire lower area is a marsh and always will be a marsh—and would realize that it is a stupid place for a golf course. Golf courses should not flood for half the year. There are far better places for golf courses inland and higher up, and that’s where any intelligent current developer would go.


Tue, 08 Apr 2008, 11:17am, Butch Larroche said:

I think one could argue that the area is an endangered species habitat because the golf course design helped create it. The lack of modern irrigation has caused the Laguna Salada to flood the last 2 of 3 winters. In addtion, the tule grass that has grown in around the ponds edge has created the flooding problem as well. The run-off rains and water have nowhere to go but into the golf course itself. I have been a lifelong Pacifica resident and a golfer of over 25 years at Sharp Park. The first time I ever heard of a Red-Legged Frog was 3 winters ago when the course flooded. If you look at old pictures from Sharp Park, one could see clearly, without the obstruction of tule’s form one end of the pond all the way to the other end. Just because you feel it could not be built there today, does’nt change the fact that it is there now, and should remain so.


Tue, 08 Apr 2008, 11:51am, Tinman said:

The whole Pacifica area is red-legged frog and SF garter snake habitat, or at least was until development paved over most of the space. Sharp Park and the adjacent GGNRA parcels are all that’s left. Whether you knew it or not, these critters have been there all along. That’s why they’re there now; they didn’t escape from a zoo.

Still, you and your fellow golfers shouldn’t worry. As far as I can see, the odds that the current crop of decision-makers actually will move to close the course are virtually nil. If the course closes, it’s far more likely to happen because of a calamitous failure of the seawall.


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